I know. And the same goes for my rich people comment. That was me being cute. I guess I did it wrong?
Steve
Somehow the word 'cute' and AzStevenCal in the same post does not compute....
.
I know. And the same goes for my rich people comment. That was me being cute. I guess I did it wrong?
Steve
Weren't you scared dinosaurs would come and drink your lemonade?
Originally it was on live in the afternoon. I think in the '70's it went to being taped and shown in the mornings.
Come home from school, do a few chores and then watch "It's Wallace!" and, later "Wallace & Ladmo".
Great, great times growing up in the late '50's and the '60's.
R.I.P. Wallace.
Just saw this, I was going to tell him I taped it in the morning and watched it after school.
Wallace and Ladmo and Legend City....Impossible to explain to anyone that didn't experience it first hand and impossible to forget if you did. RIP to both Wallace and Ladmo. I sometimes wonder if they truly understood how much they meant to so many.
Holy cow, I went the opening of that; were you there then? That space shuttle was so much fun ;-)I got hired by Legend City. Technically, that would've been my first job. But, then Burger King at Rural and Guadalupe called, and offered more hours, so I took that job instead.
One day in 1964, while 5-year-old Neil Logan was home alone watching The Wallace and Ladmo Show, Ladmo held up a drawing Logan had done.
“They used to ask kids to send in drawings all the time,” recalls the 66-year-old artist, known today for his bronze figurative sculptures. “This time, Ladmo was showing mine! I was jumping up and down with excitement, and then I realized no one was home. No one would see my Ladmo art.”
More than 60 years later, Logan’s Ladmo art is about to get a wider audience. He’s been commissioned to create a life-size bronze of Bill Thompson, Ladimir Kwiatkowski, and Pat McMahon to be placed in front of the Herberger Theater Center this spring.